He could still hear her voice; it was the last time she called his name. And the guilt rained down on him: He had ignored her not just because he was immersed in work but because he was still angry about having to go out for dinner.
Nick reached into his pocket and drew the letter halfway out, but the words of warning echoed in his head. He tucked it away and thought of the man’s eyes, filled with such conviction, such honesty, such sense of purpose.
Where all hope had been wiped from the world, this man had reignited it. Nick couldn’t imagine how Julia could be alive but… if there was even a glimmer of hope. If there was any chance of saving her…
… he would have to find a way out of this locked room and station.
Grief and confusion had been replaced with possibility and purpose. Escaping from an interrogation room, a police station, was an inconceivable, improbable, foolhardy task, but…
Not impossible.
Nick looked at the door, two inches thick, a heavy dead bolt as a lock. There were no windows or other doors. He looked at the white board, the clock on the wall ticking toward 10:00 P.M., and then his eyes fell on the ominous two-way mirror. He stared at his reflection sitting alone in the bleak, humid room in the uncomfortable metal chair, the deadly Colt Peacemaker in the center of the table, and he smiled…
The window was made of glass…
DETECTIVE ETHAN DANCE stepped back into the interrogation room. The thirty-eight-year-old detective’s perpetually sleepy eyes stared at Nick as he threw a file on the table. His white JC Penney shirt was half untucked, while the bulge of his holstered pistol distorted his off-the-rack blue blazer.
“Before Shannon comes back into the room, you want to tell me what really happened? I mean”-Dance opened up the file with his latex-gloved hand and looked inside, staring at a photo, which he concealed from Nick’s eye-“what drives someone to do this? Was it the money?”
“Money?” Nick asked in genuine confusion. “How dare you.”
“Well, I’m glad to see you have a voice.”
Nick glared at Dance, his eyes falling on the bulge in his jacket where he could just see the butt of Dance’s gun poking out.
“I’m sorry.” Dance paused in sympathy. “She was a beautiful woman. May I ask when you spoke last?”
“We had a fight this morning,” Nick said, his eyes briefly looking at the clock.
“About?”
“Dinner with her friends.”
“Mmm, I know how that goes. You sit there, she and her girlfriend are lost in conversation while you’re left with the husband, who you have nothing in common with. My ex-girlfriend dragged me to the Jersey Shore for a weekend at her friend’s house, rained the whole time, I was stuck in the house with an asshole while they went shopping, felt like arresting him for subjecting me to his boring life. I’ve hated the Jersey Shore ever since.”
Dance was good, trying to win Nick over with sympathy and commonality, but Nick wasn’t so stupid as to fall for it.
“Did you talk after that?” Dance continued.
“No, I was busy all day; conference calls and paperwork pretty much consumed me. And I know she was up to her ears in issues.”
“She was an attorney?”
“Why do you ask a question you already know the answer to?”
“Sorry, force of habit.” Dance closed the manila folder and laid it ominously on the table, next to the Colt Peacemaker. “Was she in her office all day?”
“Not sure,” Nick said abruptly.
“You didn’t speak?”
“She called a few times but I ignored the calls.”
Dance said nothing as he looked at Nick.
“Childish,” Nick said. “I know, but Jesus-Why are we talking about this? Someone killed my wife, dammit, and it wasn’t me!”
Nick’s voice echoed in the room, seeming to linger for minutes as the conversation changed direction.
“So it says here,” Dance tapped the manila folder, “you have a license for a nine-millimeter Sig-Sauer.”
“Yeah.”
“Where might that be?”
“In my safe, where it has been for the last six months. Julia hates guns.” Nick hated the irony.
“So you do know how to shoot?”
“You don’t buy a car unless you’re licensed to drive.”
“No need to be a smartass.”
“No need to treat me like an idiot, like I killed my wife.”
“I’m trying to help,” Dance said.
“Listen, if you were trying to help me you’d be out looking for the real killer.”
“Fair enough. If you didn’t do it, you’ve got to talk to me, if we are to have any hope of catching who did do it.”
“So you believe it wasn’t me?” Nick said with a sense of hope.
“Well, the thing is this,” Dance said, pulling over the gold- and brass-plated Colt Peacemaker, “this gun here is covered in fingerprints.”
“But no one has taken my prints yet,” Nick said, his voice thick with confusion as he threw his hands up.
“Actually, we got them off your wallet and cell phone, I did it myself.” Dance paused. “And they were a spot-on match. So you’re going to need to be real clear as to how your fingerprints and only your fingerprints are on this gun.”
Nick sat there, his mind spinning. He had never seen this gun, let alone touched it. In fact, he hadn’t picked up his own gun in six months, and that was with his friend Marcus Bennett at his buddy’s shooting range. He hated guns for the incredible power they placed in one man’s hand, the power of life and death at the fingertip of anyone capable of pulling the trigger.
“I should also add,” Dance continued, “ballistics isn’t back yet, probably won’t be for a few days with everyone working the plane crash, but your watch had explosive residue, gunpowder consistent with bullets. So if your story is factual, lay it on me, and if you’re about to make something up, it’s time to get real creative.”
Shannon stepped into the room, locking the door behind him. “I would suggest real creative.” His high-volume words laid bare the fact he had watched the whole exchange from beyond the two-way glass. “And feel free to look at the center of the mirror, right into the camera. It’s always so much better at helping relate to the jury.”
Nick was once again lost, the brief hope he had thought he saw in Dance obliterated by Shannon ’s entrance. He glanced up at the clock: 9:56.
With volatile force, Shannon slammed his billy club onto the table, shocking not only Nick but also Dance.
“Cold-blooded murder,” Shannon said. “Plain and simple. You don’t need to tell us a thing. We’ve got it all in that folder, everything we need for a quick and easy conviction-”
“Let’s take a break,” Dance interrupted, trying to calm Shannon. He leaned back on his chair, raising it up on two legs.
“No. A woman is dead,” Shannon shouted. “She didn’t get to take a break. I don’t care if she was your wife or not. I want answers. Was she fucking someone else and you found out? Were you fucking someone else and she found out?”
Nick’s eyes went wide with rage.
“Yeah, I see the anger rising up in you. Come on, do something,” Shannon taunted him. “Use the same fury you struck out at your wife with. All this spit and polish, Italian clothes, foreign cars, minimansions in suburbia, it’s all just window dressing for your dark heart. You’re no different from the bum in an alley who guts a hooker.”
Nick was doing everything he could to restrain himself, his muscles tensed, his blood racing.
“She was fucking some guy and you killed her.” With a sudden crash, Shannon again smashed his billy club onto the table.
But this time the force startled Dance, to the point where he lost his balance on the two legs of his chair, falling backward while desperately trying to grab the table.